List of 1820 United States presidential electors

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This is a list of electors (members of the Electoral College) who cast ballots to elect the President of the United States and Vice President of the United States in the 1820 presidential election.[1][2] The election was won by incumbent president James Monroe, with 231 (or 228) electoral votes, and incumbent vice president Daniel D. Tompkins, with 218 (or 215) votes.

A total of 235 men were elected to the Electoral College, but three—one each from Mississippi, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee—did not cast their ballots.[3] At least two, Melchior Rahm and Duncan Stewart, had died before their state's electors voted; the disposition of the third is unclear.

In addition, the status of the three electors from Missouri was a matter of dispute. Congress had passed an enabling act directing Missouri to organize a state government and that "the said state, when formed, shall be admitted into the Union."[4] The dispute was over whether Missouri's new state constitution fulfilled the requirements. In the end, two official vote totals were announced by Congress, one counting Missouri's votes and one not, with neither declared the canonical result — the source of debates over whether Monroe won 231 or 228 electoral votes.[5] Missouri was not officially admitted as a state until August 10, 1821.

Alabama[edit]

All 3 of Alabama's electors voted for James Monroe for president and Daniel D. Tompkins for vice president.[1][2]

  1. Henry Minor
  2. George Phillips
  3. John Scott

Connecticut[edit]

All 9 of Connecticut's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. John Alsop
  2. Ebenezer Brockway
  3. William Cogswell
  4. Ingoldsby W. Crawford
  5. Isaiah Loomis
  6. William Moseley
  7. Samuel H. Phillips
  8. Henry Seymour
  9. Samuel Welles

Delaware[edit]

All four of Delaware's electors voted Monroe for president. For vice president, however, all four voted for Delaware Federalist Daniel Rodney, the only votes he received.[1][2]

  1. Andrew Barratt
  2. John Clark
  3. Nicholas Ridgely
  4. Peter Robinson

Georgia[edit]

All 8 of Georgia's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. John Foster
  2. John Graves
  3. John MacIntosh
  4. David Meriwether
  5. Henry Mitchell
  6. Oliver Porter
  7. John Rutherford
  8. Benjamin Whitaker

Illinois[edit]

All 3 of Illinois's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. Adolphus Hubbard
  2. Michael Jones
  3. James B. Moore

Indiana[edit]

All 3 of Indiana's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. Daniel J. Caswell
  2. Nathaniel Ewing
  3. John H. Thompson

Kentucky[edit]

All 12 of Kentucky's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. Jesse Bledsoe
  2. Thomas Bodley
  3. Samuel Caldwell
  4. Ephraim M. Ewing
  5. Martin D. Hardin
  6. James Johnson
  7. John E. King
  8. Willis A. Lee
  9. Samuel Murrel
  10. John Pope
  11. Hubbard Taylor
  12. Richard Taylor

Louisiana[edit]

All 3 of Louisiana's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. John Randolph Grymes
  2. Philemon Thomas
  3. David L. Todd

Maine[edit]

All 9 of Maine's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. Elisha Allen
  2. William Chadwick
  3. Joshua Gage
  4. Levi Hubbard
  5. William Moody
  6. Josiah Prescott
  7. Lemuel Trescott
  8. Samuel Tucker
  9. Joshua Wingate, Jr.

Maryland[edit]

All 11 of Maryland's electors voted Monroe for president. Ten voted Tompkins for vice president, but James Forrest cast his ballot for Maryland Federalist Robert Goodloe Harper.[1][2]

  1. John Boon
  2. Robert W. Bowie
  3. Elias Brown
  4. James Forrest
  5. John Forward
  6. William Gabby
  7. Alexander McKim
  8. Joshua Prideaux
  9. Michael Sprigg
  10. John Stephen
  11. William R. Stuart

Massachusetts[edit]

All 15 of Massachusetts's electors voted Monroe for president. Seven of the 15 voted for Tompkins for vice president, but eight voted instead for New Jersey Federalist Richard Stockton, the only votes he received. No known record indicates which electors voted for each candidate.[1][2]

  1. John Adams
  2. Thomas H. Blood
  3. Benjamin Williams Crowninshield
  4. Samuel Dana
  5. John Davis
  6. Wendell Davis
  7. William Gray
  8. John Heard
  9. Ebenezer Mattoon
  10. William Phillips
  11. Jonas Sibley
  12. Seth Sprague
  13. Ezra Starkweather
  14. Daniel Webster
  15. Joseph Woodbridge

Mississippi[edit]

Two of Mississippi's 3 electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins. Elector Duncan Stewart died on November 26, 1820, before casting his ballot.[1][2][6][7]

  1. Daniel Burnet
  2. Theodore Stark
  3. Duncan Stewart (died before voting)

Missouri[edit]

All 3 of Missouri's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins, though whether they should be counted—Missouri would not be formally admitted as a state for several more months—was an unsettled matter of dispute.[1][2]

  1. John S. Brickey
  2. William Christy
  3. William Shannon

New Hampshire[edit]

Seven of New Hampshire's 8 electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins. Faithless elector William Plumer cast his ballot for Secretary of State John Quincy Adams for president and Pennsylvania Federalist Richard Rush for vice president.[1][2]

  1. David Barker, Jr.
  2. Ezra Bartlett
  3. Samuel Dinsmoor
  4. William Fisk
  5. John Pendexter
  6. William Plumer
  7. Nathaniel Shannon
  8. James Smith

New Jersey[edit]

All 8 of New Jersey's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. Joseph Budd
  2. John Crowell
  3. David Mills
  4. Isaiah Shinn
  5. John L. Smith
  6. Samuel L. Southard
  7. Aaron Vansyckel
  8. John Wilson

New York[edit]

All 29 of New York's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. John Baker
  2. James Brisban
  3. Latham A. Burrows
  4. Jonathan Collins
  5. Gilbert Eddy
  6. William Floyd
  7. Howell Gardner
  8. David Hammond
  9. Elisha Harnham
  10. Abel Huntington
  11. Benjamin Knower
  12. Issac Lawrence
  13. Edward P. Livingston
  14. Daniel MacDougall
  15. Peter Millikin
  16. Samuel Nelson
  17. Jacob Odell
  18. William B. Rochester
  19. Henry Rutgers
  20. Edward Severich
  21. Mark Spencer
  22. Farrand Stranahan
  23. Philetus Swift
  24. John Targee
  25. Charles Thompson
  26. Henry Wager
  27. John Walworth
  28. Peter Waring
  29. Seth Wetmore

North Carolina[edit]

All 15 of North Carolina's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. Benjamin H. Covington
  2. Jesse Franklin
  3. Alexander Gray
  4. John Hall
  5. Charles E. Johnson
  6. Kimborough Jones
  7. Thomas S. Kenan
  8. Francis Locke
  9. Robert Love
  10. Michael MacLeary
  11. James Mebane
  12. George Outlaw
  13. Abraham Phillips
  14. Henry J. G. Ruffin
  15. Lewis D. Wilson

Ohio[edit]

All 8 of Ohio's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. James Caldwell
  2. Alexander Campbell
  3. Lewis Dille
  4. William Henry Harrison
  5. James Kilbourne
  6. Robert Lucas
  7. John MacLaughlin
  8. Jeremiah Morrow

Pennsylvania[edit]

All 25 Pennsylvania electors were pledged to Monroe and Tompkins, but only 24 ended up casting ballots. Former state senator Melchior Rahm was chosen as an elector, but he died on the day Pennsylvania electors were scheduled to vote, October 31, 1820.[1][2]

  1. George Barnitz
  2. Philip Benner
  3. William Clinghan
  4. Paul Cox
  5. Pierce Crosby
  6. Hugh Davis
  7. Daniel W. Dingam
  8. Patrick Farrelly
  9. Andrew Gilkerson
  10. James Griffen
  11. Daniel Groves
  12. John Hamilton
  13. George Hebb
  14. Gabriel Hiester
  15. Joseph Huston
  16. James Kerr
  17. Thomas Leiper
  18. John Miley
  19. William Mitchell
  20. George Plumer
  21. Chandler Price
  22. James P. Sanderson
  23. Andrew Sutton
  24. John Todd
  25. Melchior Rahm (died before voting)

Rhode Island[edit]

All 4 of Rhode Island's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. Dutee Arnold
  2. James Fenner
  3. Robert F. Noyes
  4. Dutee J. Pearce

South Carolina[edit]

All 11 of South Carolina's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. Lewis M. Ayer
  2. William A. Ball
  3. Rasha Cannon
  4. Benjamin Dickson
  5. John Dunovant
  6. John S. Glascock
  7. Benjamin James
  8. Matthew J. Kirth
  9. Charles Miller
  10. Benjamin Rynalds
  11. Isaac Smith

Tennessee[edit]

Seven of Tennessee's 8 electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins. For reasons that remain unclear, no elector voted for the state's fourth elector district.[1][2][8][9]

  1. David Campbell
  2. Alfred M. Carter
  3. Joseph Dickson
  4. Joseph Hamilton, Sr.
  5. German Lester
  6. Henry Small
  7. John J. White

Vermont[edit]

All 8 of Vermont's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. D. Azro A. Buck
  2. Ezra Butler
  3. Gilbert Denison
  4. James Galusha
  5. Aaron Leland
  6. William Slade, Jr.
  7. Pliny Smith
  8. Timothy Stanley

Virginia[edit]

All 25 of Virginia's electors voted for Monroe and Tompkins.[1][2]

  1. Branch T. Archer
  2. William Armstrong
  3. Samuel Blackburn
  4. William Brockenbrough
  5. John T. Brook
  6. Thomas Brown
  7. John Edie
  8. Charles H. Graves
  9. Hugh Holmes
  10. William C. Holt
  11. Armistead Hoomes
  12. James Hunter
  13. William Jones
  14. Joseph Martin
  15. John Pegram
  16. John Purnall
  17. William Cabell Rives
  18. Andrew Russell
  19. Archibald Rutherford
  20. Robert Shields
  21. Robert B. Stark
  22. Archibald Stuart
  23. John Taliaferro
  24. Robert Taylor
  25. Charles Yancey

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "A New Nation Votes". elections.lib.tufts.edu. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "A New Nation Votes". elections.lib.tufts.edu. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  3. ^ Maskell, Jack; Halstead, T. J.; Welborn, Angie (December 13, 2000). "Electoral Vote Counts in Congress: Survey of Certain Congressional Practices" (PDF). EveryCRSReport.com. Congressional Research Service. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  4. ^ United States Congress (1820). United States Statutes at Large. Act of March 6, ch. 23, vol. 3. pp. 545–548. Retrieved August 9, 2006.
  5. ^ U.S. House of Representatives (1820). Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 235. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  6. ^ "DEATH is in itself at all times awful..." Natchez Gazette. 16 December 1820. p. 2. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  7. ^ "A New Nation Votes". elections.lib.tufts.edu. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  8. ^ Tennessee Blue Book and Official Directory. Secretary of State. 1890. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
  9. ^ "PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION". The Nashville Gazette. 16 December 1820. p. 3. Retrieved 14 February 2024.
Preceded by Electoral College (United States)
1820
Succeeded by